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Goosen, M.F., 2013. Institutional Aspects of Economic Growth: Assessing the Significance of Public Debt, Economic Governance and Industrial Competition. Open Business Journal, 6, pp.1-13.
Institutional Aspects of Economic Growth: Assessing the Significance of Public Debt, Economic Governance and Industrial CompetitionMattheus F. A. GoosenOffice of Research & Graduate StudiesAlfaisal University P.O. Box 50927Riyadh, 11533, Saudi ArabiaEmail: mgoosen@alfaisal.eduTel: +966 (0)53-294-1468
Abstract: Institutional aspects of economic growth are critically reviewed with emphasis on the fiscal crisis facing the European Union (EU). In particular the importance of public debt, economic governance, and industrial competition are assessed, as well as the effectiveness of econometric models in forecasting economic growth. Likewise, the debate on whether political institutions cause economic growth, or whether, alternatively, growth and human capital accumulation lead to institutional improvement is discussed. Positive and negative institutional factors on economic growth will also be briefly debated.
Keywords: Institutions, economic growth, public debt, economic governance, industrial competition, catch-up, econometric models, EU
1. INTRODUCTION
One of the most significant areas of research in economics is in trying to comprehend the
factors that contribute to economic growth and political change, and how this affects the
economic rise and decline of nations [1, 2]. The sovereign debt crisis has created enormous
anguish in the European Monetary Union (EMU), and emergency measures are being used in
order to try preventing its breakdown. Daianu [3] argues that there is need for a thorough reform
of the governance structure of the European Union in conjunction with radical changes in the
regulation and supervision of financial markets. Furthermore, Nobel Laureate Michael Spence
cautions of the frictions that will arise when the world tries to accommodate both rapidly-
growing developing goliaths like India and China and slow-growing developed nations like
United States [4]. He goes on to describe the emergence of China as just part of an amazing
catching-up process going on in the world.
There are economic philosophical differences (e.g. Keynesian versus Hayekian type of
reasoning) in how to diagnose the EU crisis and how to cure the illness [5, 6]. The philosophies
of John Keynes and Friedrich von Hayek, for instance, have dominated the economic scene for
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the last 60 years. Both of these leading economists had distinct ideas about economic freedom,
concepts that were very clearly in opposition to each other. To Hayek, less government
involvement meant added economic choice. He assumed that when individuals are free to select,
the economy performs more efficiently. Furthermore, a decline in government spending with the
aim of debt reduction and reducing the size of government would facilitate private sector
investments, provide incentives for creative free enterprise and stimulate demand in industries,
improve competition through international trade and increase employment, thus creating more
sustainable economic growth [5, 7-9]. On the other hand with Keynesian economics there is the
belief that dynamic government involvement in the marketplace and monetary policy is the best
way of guaranteeing economic progress and stability. The resurgence of Keynesian economics
has been very contentious amongst professional economists. One point of view is that you cannot
create sustainable growth through increased government spending called 'stimuli' and
compensate with higher taxes. Although many economists, support Keynesian stimulus, others
believe that higher government spending will not help the EU, nor the US economy recover from
the recession [10, 11]. So we can ask the question, was John Keynes correct, can government fix
the mass unemployment created by a fiscal decline? Or is that a risky misunderstanding as
claimed by his opponent, Friedrich von Hayek? We can speculate that perhaps the answer or
cure to the fiscal illness facing the EU as well as the US lies somewhere in between these two
types of economic philosophies.
In this paper we will argue that the European Union (EU) debt crisis poses a serious risk to
the economic and financial stability of the world. While the EU is trying to resolve its fiscal
problems through financial regulation and crisis management, there is also a lot of uncertainty.
The EU may need internal modifications in its governance structure, including tightening up on
entry requirements. The key to solving these issues is to build up budget surpluses. While things
will improve there is no quick fix. Furthermore, the projections of public debt ratios lead many
experts to conclude that the path pursued by fiscal authorities in a number of industrial states is
unsustainable. The consequences of taking on too much debt are that the process usually leads to
default and insolvency. It makes no difference whether it is a business or a country. Far-reaching
actions are required to limit the liabilities of governments. Likewise, we will discuss that a major
vehicle to sustain economic expansion among nations lies in the industrial catch-up processes
among frontrunners and stragglers that are born out of competition for enhanced performance. It 2
will be shown that key elements in the catch-up process are the use of knowledge by emerging
nations to mimic industries in order to save time and increase economic output; the need for
nations to invest and save; and for states to sell their products to a worldwide market, rather than
just domestically. Finally, we will join the debate on whether political institutions cause
economic growth, or whether, alternatively, growth and human capital accumulation lead to
institutional improvement. It will be shown that positive institutional factors on economic growth
include consensual political systems that are flexible, a competitive environment with fiscal
incentives that allows for continuous improvement in efficiency, industrial competition that
allows for economic choices, and a well-developed educational system to help provide
competent human capital for formal institutions such as courts. Negative institutional factors
affecting economic growth are corruption due to fiscal and political decentralization resulting in
stagnation due to reduced economic choices, autocrats or dictators that make poor policy
choices, and high public debt in relation to a state’s annual economic output.
There are a variety of institutional arrangements or determinants which influence the
economic development process across countries [12-17]. These include political structure,
political stability and relative size of government, civil liberties, property rights, and economic
incentives. In addition, economic governance, public debt and industrial competition have been
recognized as key factors in the economic success of nations. This knowledge is important, for
example, to spur technological innovation in industries and countries, thus giving them a
competitive edge. Abrams & Lewis [12], as a case in point, analyzed the growth rates for ninety
nations from 1968 to 1987. They found that political order as well as economic incentives and
personal freedoms were significant determinants of growth. David Landes [18] in his book on
“The Wealth and Poverty of Nations” argues that the history of the past 500 years should be
Eurocentric. It is primarily the story of how expansionist Europeans and their ex colonies have
grown very rich at the expense, to some degree, of the rest of the world. In fairness, Landes also
argues that the history of the world from 500 to 1500 should be primarily Islamocentric.
In a study reported by Barro [6], it was shown that the economic growth rate was improved
by higher initial schooling and life expectancy, lower fertility, lower government consumption,
better maintenance of the rule of law, lower inflation and improved trade. In contrast to Abrams
and Lewis [12] study, Barro [6] found that political freedom had only a weak effect on growth,
but this effect was non-linear. For example, at low levels of political rights, an expansion of 3
these rights stimulated economic growth. However, once a moderate amount of democracy had
been attained, then a further increase reduced growth. In contrast, there was a strong positive
effect of the standard of living on a country’s inclination for democracy. North [19, 20] contends
that institutions are central in creating property rights (e.g. real estate ownership), the rule of law,
and competition. This provides stability or order which is essential for ensuring economic
growth. His model of order-maintaining systems has two poles or sets of political order with an
autocratic regime (i.e. authoritarian political order) on one end and a democracy (i.e. consensual
political order) on the other (Table 1) [20].
Table 1. Key characteristics of countries that are able to adapt to external changes quickly and correctly due to their ability to obtain a consensus as a result of their flexible culture (adapted from North [20], Schlueter [14], Gottinger and Goosen [2]).
Employ common belief system to set up self-enforcing limits for politicians
State should have an effective constitution that assigns citizen rights and places limits on government
decision making
Well defined property and personal rights
State officials must adhere to obligations and rights
North [20] remarks that economic markets tend to become inertial or complacent over time
in the absence of a stimulus such as innovative institutional transformation. This is the same idea
that democracies become less efficient at adapting to changing circumstances over time due to
emergence of special interest groups (e.g. lobbyists) [13, 21]. However, a critical driving force
for economic growth among states is a built-in and historically observable rivalry in stature,
influence and economic performance that drives countries to get ahead or not to fall too far
behind.
Cecchetti, et al. [22] notes that the monetary calamity that erupted in mid-2008 led to a
sudden increase of public debt in many advanced economies; governments were required to re-
capitalize banks, to take over a large part of the debts of failing financial institutions, and to
introduce large stimulus programs to revive demand. The projections of public debt ratios lead
Cecchetti et al. [22] to conclude that the path pursued by fiscal authorities in a number of
industrial states is unsustainable.
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Glaeser et al. [23] revisited the discussion over whether political institutions cause
economic growth, or whether, alternatively, growth and human capital accumulation lead to
institutional improvement. They found that most indicators of institutional quality used to
establish the proposition that institutions cause growth, as outlined for example in North’s and
Olson’s theories [24, 25] were constructed to be conceptually unsuitable for that purpose. Results
suggested that human capital is a more basic source of growth than are the institutions, poor
countries get out of poverty through good policies, often pursued by dictators, and subsequently
improve their political institutions. As an example, in a recent interview Paul Kagame, the man
who ended Rwanda’s genocide in which 10% of the country’s population was killed in just 100
days, was quoted as saying that as the country’s President, he does not want foreign aid. He
wants investment and free trade. “We believe in free enterprise, free market and competition. So
we have to make sure there is a conducive environment for people to be creative and
innovative,” he told the interviewer [26]. In September 2009, the World Bank named Rwanda its
“top reformer of business regulation,” as the country soared to 67 th place from 143rd the year
before for ease of doing business.” Many African leaders, however, have been criticized for
hanging on to power well beyond their term limits. Whether Mr. Kagame will be one of the
exceptions to this trend remains to be seen.
This paper critically reviews the institutional aspects of economic growth with emphasis
on the fiscal crisis facing the European Union (EU). In particular the significance of public
debt, economic governance and industrial rivalry are assessed as well as the utility of
econometric models in forecasting economic growth. In addition, the debate on whether
political institutions cause economic growth, or whether, alternatively, growth and human
capital accumulation lead to institutional improvement is discussed.
2. PUBLIC DEBT AND ECONOMIC GROWTH
Concern over the sustainability of some EU countries’ sovereign debt has continued to
increase over the past few years. Cafisco [27] in examining the ways in which the monetary
calamity caused a worsening of European debt-to-GDP ratios, concluded that while things will
improve there is no quick fix. He also explored which states required fiscal adjustment for debt
sustainability. Greece and Portugal had unsustainable fiscal policies well before the 2008-2009
financial crisis; for Spain and Italy there is uncertainty about debt sustainability primarily due to
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worries about their future economic development. The key to solving these issues is to build up
budget surpluses. However, this will take time.
Cottarelli [28] in a recent editorial asked the question about why markets have been
worried about fiscal sustainability in the euro area and not in other advanced economies. The
answer to this query is critical to understanding the policies needed to resolve the current crisis
and also to help avoid future ones. The fiscal accounts of the United States, United Kingdom and
Japan are as weak as those of some of the countries in the euro area. Ranking countries by their
2011 debt-to-GDP ratios, Cottarelli found Japan was first (i.e. the worst) and the USA was sixth
(i.e. debt ratio = 102%), just ahead of Portugal (i.e. debt ratio = 107%) and Ireland. So the crucial
question is why are markets forgiving the fiscal negligence’s of other advanced economies and
not those of the euro area? Probable economic growth is perceived to be higher in the USA. This
growth is critical for fiscal sustainability. We can reason however that high debt levels will
hinder US growth. There is, however, a common denominator to the experiences of the USA,
UK and Japan that is the massive intervention by their central banks to help prop up their fiscal
systems. Cottarelli [28] concluded that reducing euro area weaknesses will require good
monetary and fiscal policies designed to deal with the current crisis, such as the building up of
budget surpluses, as similarly proposed by Cafisco [27]. Further progress is also needed in
strengthening the fiscal union to avoid a future reappearance of comparable calamities.
Monetary crises are typically associated not only with severe economic slumps but also
with a considerable worsening of fiscal situations; all of this resulting in an increase of public
debt. In similar debt-to-GDP ratio studies performed by Cafisco [27] and Cottarelli [28], Furceri
and Zdzienicka [29] measured the progression of the government gross debt-to-GDP ratio in the
aftermath of banking crises from 1980 to 2006. Specifically, using a sample of 154 countries, the
results of their exercise suggested that banking crises have produced a significant and long-
lasting increase in the government debt-to-GDP ratio, with the effect being a function of the
severity of the crisis. In particular, examining a set of structural and policy variables they found
that larger increases in debt occurred in countries with worse initial fiscal positions and with a
larger share of foreign debt. Countries were urged to avoid temporary stimuli since this would
lead to increase permanently the debt levels. As an analogy, we can relate this situation to an
individual consumer with an inadequate income using a credit card to buy food and to pay for
accommodation rent. Assuming that the consumer, with a limited income, is only able to pay for 6
the interest on the card balance, then the individual will be unable to pay off the balance itself.
This is a non-sustainable situation. Most people eventually learn to avoid this fiscal
irresponsibility; they learn to make good policy decisions.
Japan has been living with a public debt ratio of over 150% without any adverse effect on
its cost. So it is possible that investors will continue to put strong faith in industrial countries’
ability to repay, and that worries about excessive public debts are exaggerated. As a matter of
macroeconomic theory, so long as the debt/income ratio is constant, an economy could live with
any level of debt. Cecchetti et al. [22] take a lengthier and less friendly outlook of current
developments, arguing that the aftermath of the financial crisis has brought the simmering fiscal
troubles in industrial economies to the boiling point. The forecasts of public debt ratios lead
Cecchetti et al. [22] to conclude that far-reaching actions are needed to limit the rapid growth of
current and future liabilities of governments and reduce their unfavorable consequences for long-
term growth and fiscal stability.
As mentioned earlier, two main problems states in the European Union with respect to
economic growth and the public debt crisis are Greece and Spain [30]. The economic outlook is
bleak for Spain. The weak points of Spain’s economy are its high unemployment rate and its low
productivity, which are interconnected. In 2007, Spain’s unemployment rate was 8.3%. By the
end of November, the rate reached 19.4%. That compares with an average rate of 10% among
the 16 euro zone countries. The recession is forcing Spain to lessen its dependence on foreign
investment from levels that approached a maximum of 10% of GDP prior to the crisis to only
3.6% during the third quarter of 2009. The government introduced the Law of the Sustainable
Economy, which took effect in mid-2010. Its main goal is to build an economic model based on
energy efficiency and new technologies. Educational reform (i.e. human capital formation) is
also part of this new approach.
The politics of public debt vary by country. In some, due to unpleasant experiences, there is
a culture of thriftiness. In others, however, extravagant official spending is commonplace. As an
example of the latter, Michael Pento [31] reported that the Persian Gulf emirate of Dubai was
seeking to defer debt payment on nearly $90 billion in liabilities from its state-run companies.
Like many other over-leveraged enterprises and some countries across the globe, the government
of Dubai made a massive gamble on real estate that has turned out poorly. Even economic giants
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like Japan and the United States need to take heed, with the latter also suffering economically
from the near failure of large real estate companies like Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae.
The examples produced over the last few years should send a stark warning to the U.S. as
well as the European Union that they cannot continue to operate at current levels of monetary
and fiscal extravagance. The ramifications of taking on too much debt are that unless the party in
question can be bailed out, the de-leveraging process usually leads to default and insolvency. It
makes no difference whether it is a business, like AIG, or a country. Either way, the entity in
question must always be able to service its debt, either by generating revenue or by taxation. If
the venture or state becomes too extended, it becomes dangerously dependent on continuous
economic growth or on continually low interest rates. Taking these warnings to heart, Saudi
Arabia's government, for instance, has used the budget surplus of recent years to reduce public
debt from SR660bn (i.e. $176 bn USD) in 2002, representing 82% of GDP, to SR237bn ($63 bn
USD) in 2008, which represents 13.5% of gross domestic product. High oil prices led to record
budget and external current account surpluses in 2008, despite the public expansionary fiscal
policy and surge in imports. Part of the surplus has been used to repay domestic debt, which fell
by 5% to 13.5% of GDP [32].
Reinhart and Rogoff [33] and others [34] in recent papers argued that higher debt may stunt
economic growth. They reported that countries with a gross public debt exceeding 90% of their
annual economic output tended to grow a lot more slowly. In particular for developed states
above the 90% debt threshold the average annual growth rate was about 2% lower that for states
with a public debt of less than 30% of their GDP. This is of particular importance to countries
such as the U. S. where growth in government debt, for example, stood at 85% of GDP in 2009
and is expected to surpass 100% within 5 years. However, while they found that the threshold for
public debt was similar in advanced and emerging economies, emerging markets faced a lower
threshold for external debt, which is usually denominated in a foreign currency; When external
debt reached 60% of GDP for emerging states, then annual growth declined by about 2%.
In their book Public Debt and Economic Growth, Greiner and Fincke [35] observed that an
increase in community liability must be accompanied by an increase in the primary surplus of the
government to guarantee sustainability of public debt. They presented an endogenous growth
model and assumed that the primary surplus rises as public debt increases so that sustainability
of public debt is given. Endogenous growth theory holds that investment in human capital, 8
innovation and knowledge are significant contributors to economic growth. Greiner and Fincke
analyzed how different debt strategies affect stability and the long-run growth rate. It was
demonstrated that the economy is always stable under a balanced public budget while when the
government runs permanent deficits it is stable only if the primary surplus reacts sufficiently
strongly to higher public debt. Furthermore, Greiner [36] also ran their endogenous growth
model with human capital, where human capital formation is the result of public education. The
government finances expenditures in the schooling sector by the tax revenue and by public
deficit. A sensitivity analysis of the dynamics of the model was presented and it turns out that the
parameter determining the reaction of the primary surplus to changes in public debt is decisive as
concerns the stability of the model. This is a similar result to those reported by Cafisco [27],
Cottarelli [28], and Furceri and Zdzienicka [29] in their public debt-GDP ratio studies. For more
information on the importance of human capital formation see the last section in this paper which
discusses whether political institutions cause economic growth, or whether, alternatively, growth
and human capital accumulation lead to institutional improvement.
3. ECONOMIC GOVERNANCE, PERFORMANCE AND EVOLUTION OF INSTITUTIONS
Spence [4] noted that there is a lot of variety in governance. You have autocratic systems,
dominant single parties, and full-fledged multiparty democracies. The governments that succeed
have benefited from leadership which brings multi-stakeholders together. They choose roughly
the correct economic model. In other words they made good policy decisions. They were also
benevolent in the sense that they made good policy decisions to help improve the lives of all the
people in their societies. Similar conclusions were drawn by Glaeser et al. [23] in the debates
over whether political institutions cause economic growth, or whether, alternatively, growth and
human capital accumulation lead to institutional improvement. Their results suggested that poor
countries get out of poverty through good policies, often pursued by dictators, and subsequently
improve their political institutions. Human capital was found to be a more basic source of growth
than were institutions. This will be discussed in more detail in the next section.
Diverse economies have used various institutions to carry out functions at different times
with varying amounts of success, as shown by the industrial policies and catch-up competition
between different Asian states. The field of economic governance studies and compares these
institutions and processes that support economic activity using empirical and case studies as well 9
as theoretical models [37]. In contrast, corporate governance analyses the internal management
of a corporation and the rules and procedures by which a corporation deals with its stakeholders.
Corporate and economic governance are often connected since the problems faced by an internal
organization (e. g. information and commitment costs) are often similar to property and contract
transaction costs [38]. This section will deal primarily with economic governance.
The governments that fail tend to move wealth around rather than creating it through
innovation and competition. In other words they make poor policy decisions with regards to
having, for instance, open and economically competitive industries. If we look around the world,
in economic terms, at failing performances there is usually a governing group that is pursuing its
own interests somehow. A good example is in the comparison between Asia and Africa. Asian
countries such as Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore and more recently China, were the
poorest parts of the world right after World War II. They educated their people. The global
economy opened, and they were successful. This turns out to be the durable basis of the creation
of wealth; human capital, creativity, and innovation. Many African countries, such as Zimbabwe,
on the other hand are still struggling. Rather than creating wealth through education, creativity
and industrial competition, they simply moved wealth around from one segment of society to
another.
Spence [4] argues that the governance institutions in the global economy are significantly
behind market integration. In the present day there can be accidents, crises, and mismanagement
or incomplete management; look at what happened to the Japanese economy after the combined
tsunami and nuclear reactor disasters. The country’s institutions are struggling to handle the new
reality. Similarly, we can see the EU trying to resolve its fiscal problems which have resulted in
part from poor economic governance. While there is progress, there is also a lot of uncertainty.
Spence goes on to explain that the G20 is supposed to be the main place where priorities are set
and where this is coordination. The EU institution was created to synchronize the major
economies and to put them together. It remains to be seen whether or not this will be successful.
We can speculate that the EU may need internal modifications in its governance structure,
including tightening up on entry requirements.
Formal and informal institutions evolve under different conditions in order to best support
economic growth in a country by protecting property rights, enforcing contracts and organizing
collective action which provides the appropriate infrastructure of rules, regulations and 10
information that are needed for workable arrangements among individual and corporate
economic players [16, 37]. Landes [18], for instance, in his “Wealth and Poverty of Nations” has
combined quantitative economic history with institutional analysis to produce a captivating
historical overview of economic growth. What Landes does is to assess the mutual relationship
between technology and society to analyze examples of states that succeeded as well as failed.
DeLong [39] notes that several lessons from this book include: try to ensure that a state’s
government is a regime that enables innovation and production, rather than a government that
maintains power by a redistribution of wealth from its enemies to its friends; recognize that the
task of a less-productive economy is to imitate rather than innovate; and be familiar with that as
things change we need to change with them.
The concept of economic governance covers many areas including institutions and
organizational behavior, economic development and growth, industrial organization, law and
economics, political economy and comparative economic systems. In order to get a better grasp
of the concept he has organized it along different dimensions and categories covering the
purpose as well as the nature of the institution (Table 2). The latter, for instance, were subdivided
Table 2. Various Dimensions of the Concept of Economic Governance [2, 16]
Dimension Categories
Purpose of the institution
Protection of property rights against theft by other individuals and usurpation by the state itself or its agents
Enforcement of voluntary contracts among individuals Provision of physical and regulatory infrastructure to facilitate economic activity and
functioning of protection and enforcement categories
Nature of the institution
Formal state institutions that enact & enforce laws, including legislature, police, judiciary, & regulatory agencies
Private institutions, such as arbitration forums, that function under the state law For-profit private institutions that provide information and enforcement, such as
organized crime and security agencies Group enforcement through social networks & norms
by Dixit [16] into four categories; formal state institutions that enact and enforce laws, including
legislature, police, judiciary and regulatory agencies; private institutions, such as arbitration
forums, that function under the state law; for-profit private institutions that provide information
and enforcement, such as organized crime and security agencies; and group enforcement through
social networks and norms.
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As an example of the evolution of an early institutional structure, Greif et al. [15] reported
on how groups of traders in medieval Europe took collective action to counter a ruler’s
incentives to violate the member’s property rights. Another key instance from this period is the
Magna Carta, also called Magna Carta Libertatum (the Great Charter of Freedoms), an English
legal charter which was originally issued in 1215 [40]. Magna Carta required King John of
England to proclaim certain rights pertaining to the country’s citizens, respect legal procedures,
and accept that his powers would be bound by the law. It supported what became the writ of
habeas corpus, allowing appeal against unlawful imprisonment. Magna Carta was the most
significant early influence on the governance process that led to the rule of constitutional law
today, including the United States Constitution. It was the first document forced onto an
autocratic ruler by a group of his subjects (i.e. the barons) in an attempt to limit his powers by
law and protect their property rights.
The sequence of economic and political reforms matters, with Giavazzi and Tabellini [41]
arguing that states that implement economic reforms first and then democratize do much better
than those that follow the opposite route. A recent example of this is the transformation of the
old Soviet Union into Russia and the evolution of modern China. The latter with its more flexible
industrial policies and management system implementing economic reform first, has had a
greater impact on the world economy.
Much debate remains about the exact measures of the excellence of an institution, and how
these affect economic results. Furthermore, democracy and authoritarianism come in many
different varieties. Barro [42] for example finds that there is an optimum level in the relationship
between economic growth and degree of democratic freedom; more democracy raises growth
when political freedoms are weak, but depresses growth when a moderate amount of freedom is
already established. Persson [43] found that the exact type of democracy matters for developing
policy and economic outcomes; parliamentary, proportional and permanent democracies
appeared to encourage more growth promoting structural policies, whereas presidential and
temporary democracies do not. The exact reason for this is not well understood even after
reviewing the literature on lawmaking organizations [44].
In a report for the World Bank, Kaufman et al. [45] constructed six measures of
institutional quality (Table 3). Three of these, rule of law, control of corruption, and political
instability and violence, deal with protection of property rights and enforcement of contracts 12
while the first one, voice and accountability relates to governance since good communication can
reduce problems between citizens and agencies of the state. Governance is also affected by
government effectiveness and regulatory burdens. It can be argued, however, that the method of
construction of these six measures of institutional quality relies on subjective perception.
Table 3 Measures of Institutional Quality (adapted from Kaufman et al. [45] and Dixit [16])
Type of Quality What is measured?Voice & accountability Political, human and civil rightsPolitical instability and violence Prospect of violent threats to, or changes in, government, including terrorismGovernment effectiveness Competence of bureaucracy & quality of public service deliveryRegulatory burden Incidence of market unfriendly policiesRule of law Quality of contract enforcement, police, and courts as well as likelihood of
crime and violenceControl of corruption Exercise of public power for private gain, including petty and grand
corruption and state capture
The protection of property rights supplied by the state is often supplemented by private
security agencies; the latter works cooperatively with the police. In addition, information
gathering constitutes a major source of advantage for private agencies/ systems over formal law
[16]. Enforcement of a contract in a court of law, for example, requires proof of misconduct by
one of the parties. Information gathering can be done more effectively by private agencies. The
most notable item about commercial contract disputes is that private alternatives, such as
arbitration by industrial experts, are almost always tried first. Only as a last resort will one of the
parties file a suit in a formal court of law [9]. The advantages of expert arbitration are often
recognized by formal legal systems with the courts standing ready to enforce the decisions of
expert industry arbitrators.
Formal governance at the international level works through institutions such as the World
Trade Organization. The procedures of their sovereign country members are subject to self-
enforcement and are thus similar to social networks [46]. Arbitration of international contract
disputes works in a similar way [47]. While such arbitrators lack direct power to enforce their
decisions, they are normally backed by treaties that ensure enforcement by national courts.
Organized crime also plays a role in governance [48, 49]. If a state, for example, is
unwilling to protect certain kinds of property or enforce certain kinds of contracts, such as illegal
activities, then private institutions, such as organized crime, can emerge to perform these
functions for a profit. Gambetta [48] argues that the Mafia emerged in 19th century Sicily in order
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to fill a vacuum left by a lack of state protection. Landowners started hiring guards from former
feudal lords, as well as bandits, to protect their property. Eventually the Mafia’s role expanded to
provide contract enforcement in illegal markets. In a similar fashion the Japanese Yakusa
evolved just after the end of the Second World War, and the Russian mafia after the fall of the
Soviet Union; in both cases to fill a vacuum left by a temporary weak state [50, 51].
The information function of organized crime, such as the Mafia, is comparable to that of
credit ranking agencies and Better Business Bureaus [52]; keeping track of previous contract
violations, informing a customer of the history of a potential business partner, and providing
punishment if a customer’s trading partner violates their contract. In the case of a Mafia enforcer,
anyone who cheats a customer of the Mafioso is subject to the possibility of physical violence.
With a Better Business Bureau, if a company misbehaves, after having joined the organization,
then it is subject to a poor rating or blacklisting. As economic activity increases, formal
institutions usually become better than informal ones, but the latter provide a useful function
under the shadow of formal ones, even in the most advanced economies.
4. ECONOMIC GROWTH, INDUSTRIAL RACING AND CATCH-UP
A foremost mechanism to sustain economic expansion among nations lies in the industrial
catch-up processes among leaders and stragglers. This is born out of rivalry for enhanced
performance, and is similar to competitions between teams in sporting events. How the
interactive patterns of growth and development emerge in a historical context is the foremost
subject of a recent book by Gottinger and Goosen [2] on Strategies of Economic Growth and
Catch-up: Industrial Policies and Management. It establishes a link between progress and
expansion economies and assesses the mechanisms of growth facilitating factors that support
technology-based growth processes over time with technology as a leading source and
institutional inefficiencies as binding constraints. Furthermore, understanding how industries,
supported by effective industrial policies, make optimal investments in the face of dynamic
competition helps to reveal the nature of inter-country competition and industrial advantage.
Another source of racing behavior can be linked to ‘animal spirits’ and innovation through
entrepreneurship. In competitive analysis involving R&D decisions the focus is on breakthrough
innovations which could create entirely new markets; for example, as occurs in studies featuring
patent racing between competing firms.
14
In a related book The Next Convergence, The Future of Economic Growth in a Multispeed
World, Spence [4] also debated the dynamics of high-speed growth (i.e. catch-up growth). A key
element in it is that the knowledge of what we have learned over the past several hundred years
in the developed countries can be used by emerging nations, so they do not have to learn it all
over again. That saves time and increases their potential output. The second vital component is
the need for emerging nations in the catch-up growth stage to invest and save. Spence explains,
for example, that China in 1978, when it started growing rapidly, was investing and saving at 35
percent, or a third of the country’s GDP. The third mechanism that is really critical is that
emerging states have to sell what they produce in a global market. In a poor country, such as
China was say 20 years ago, the domestic economy was used to primarily generating housing
and food, and consuming some energy. The economy of an emerging nation cannot be scaled-up
selling only to such a limited domestic market. So these countries invest at very high rates,
intensify the scope of the developing part of the economy, attract workers into it, and then sell
into a worldwide market. China is the latest example if a state that has successfully used this
process. So the key for the EU and the USA is the need to get a larger share of the world market
over the coming years when selling their products in an increasingly competitive environment.
The rapid development of a number of Asian economies, in contrast to the UK and the US,
is shown in Table 4, where variations in GDP per capita are compared. All five countries went
Table 4. Historical Change in Per Capita GDP, in terms of 1990 international Geary-Khamis dollars, of Five Countries (adapted from Maddison [54] and [55], and Gottinger and Goosen [2])
1700 1820 1870 1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 1995 2003
UK
USA
Japan
S. Korea
China
1250 1706
1257
669
600
3190
2445
737
604
530
4492
4091
1180
-
545
4548
5552
1696
1009
-
6856
7010
2874
1442
-
8857
11328
3986
1105
673
12931
18577
13428
4114
1067
17495
24484
19849
11818
2653
21310
29037
21218
14673
4803
15
through different stages of industrialization within a period of 300 years. Mokyr [53] in The
Lever of Riches argues that technological creativity and subsequent growth was a contributing
factor in the rise of the West. According to Mokyr two main factors were involved in the
unbelievable surge in European technological creativity; money-oriented common sense that
encouraged Europeans’ attempts to control the environment, and the divided character of
European political structure that spurred competition, (i.e. industrial racing) since many
countries feared to fall behind their neighbors.
As described earlier, industrial competition among nations or regional economic entities
has been an essential driving force for economic growth [2]. Rivalry pushes a state’s standing,
prestige, power and economic performance thus allowing a country or a region to get ahead of
their competition. Institutions can support this competitive process by encouraging
entrepreneurship, fostering education and training, and by making it easier for companies to set
up new businesses. We can argue that economic growth essentially embodies a science and
technology race between industrialized nations. This economic or industrial contest creates value
added products through competition as reflected in an increased GDP. Prime examples of this
catch-up process are the countries in the Arabian Gulf (e.g. Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE, Oman,
Qatar and Bahrain). Increased revenues from oil resources over the past few decades are being
used, for instance, to set up new educational institutions. In Saudi Arabia the number of
universities has more than doubled, increased from 10 to 24 over a period of 5 years (NAJD
Online Academy [56]). In addition the government has implemented a Science and Technology
Strategic Plan called Vision 2020 to help diversify the economy [57]. To assist in this
development, entrepreneurship is being encouraged through workshops, and programs such as
Badir [58]. Badir is an initiative of Saudi Arabia’s National Research Institute - King Abdulaziz
City for Science and Technology (KACST). The initiative aims to assist people in the
commercialization of technology research and opportunities through supporting the growth of
emerging technology-based businesses in the Kingdom. It remains to be seen if the country can
improve its efficiency sufficiently to make a success of this program.
There is also an increase in the participation of women in the Arabian Gulf region’s
governmental institutions even up to the cabinet level. In Oman, for example, the head of state
and government is the hereditary Sultan who appoints a cabinet called the Diwans to assist him.
In the early 1990s, the Sultan instituted an elected advisory council, the Majlis ash-Shura, though 16
few Omanis were eligible to vote. Universal suffrage for those over 21 was instituted in 2003
and over 190,000 people (74% of those registered) voted to elect the 84 seats [59]. Two women
were elected to seats. The country in 2010 also had three women ministers (i.e. Minister of
Higher Education, Minister of Social Development and Minister of Tourism). While there are no
legal political parties nor, at present, any active opposition movement, as more and more young
Omanis become educated, it seems likely that the traditional, tribal-based political system will
have to be adjusted. Many of the Arabian Gulf countries are going through a similar catch-up
process in human capacity building and institutional structures development. Glaeser et al. [23]
argues that much evidence points to the dominance of human capital for both industrial growth
and democratization. Their results were consistent with a perspective on institutions outlined by
Djankov et al. [60]; the greater the human and social capital of a community, the more attractive
are its institutional opportunities.
The collective nature of science and technology development is at the root of
industrialization and economic progress. Institutions can assist in this technology race by helping
to identify the most promising skill options, and by promoting entrepreneurship [61]. This can be
done, for instance, through government sponsored strategic workshops for the private and public
sectors. Abramovitz [62] explained the central idea of the catch-up hypothesis as trailing
countries adopting a backlog of unexploited technology. While a leader is restricted in increasing
its productivity by the advance of new technology, trailing countries, such as China, India and
the Arabian Gulf states, have the potential to make a larger leap as they are provided with the
privilege of exploiting the backlog in addition to newly developed technology. Formal
institutions can assist in exploiting this potential by instigating technological entrepreneurship
programs through government incentives, as well as by fostering education. Years of education
can be used as a replacement for technical competence. This concept is most closely associated
with the work of Lipset [63], Przeworski [64, 65], and Barro [42] who believed that educated
people are more likely to resolve their differences through negotiation and thus provide greater
stability which in turn is the key to economic growth. This is similar to the concept that
knowledge is essential to the dynamics of high-speed growth (i.e. catch-up growth) as put forth
by Spence [4].
Gottinger [17] and Gottinger and Goosen [2] describe the development of a model to
analyze the patterns of catching up, falling behind and getting ahead in technological racing (i.e. 17
industrial competition) among nations or regional economic entities. The impact of social
institutions arises by allowing the potential technology gap to be modified by them. It allows for
more complex growth dynamics. The model achieved the goal of merging the neoclassical
system with slow technology diffusion and institutional variations. Model predictions and
empirical observations indicated that new technology adoption rates vary between countries.
This variance could be mostly due to the social capabilities of those countries that demonstrate
various competence levels of adoption promoted by bureaucratic efficiency, including a low
level of corruption, and democratic rights [66]. A good example is Latin America which carries
relatively high adoption rates but overall the region has failed to take advantage of its potential
because of poor political and social institutions.
In terms of catch-up times, Gottinger [17] and Gottinger and Goosen [2] demonstrate that
unless Europe, East Asia and even the Arabian Gulf, reduce their inefficiency levels, they must
rely on higher accumulation rates to continue to catch-up with countries such as the United
States. Institutional frameworks are important in achieving this improved efficiency. The
bureaucratic efficiency index and the index of political and civil rights, for instance, are the main
explanations for a nation’s different level of productivity. Any policy that allows follower
nations to better adopt foreign technology should increase their growth rate. Since the difference
in technology adoption appears to be related to a nation's institutional efficiency, observations
suggest that governments are well-advised to pursue policies that increase market efficiency.
In summary, a key mechanism to sustain economic expansion among nations lies in the
industrial catch-up processes among leaders and laggards that are born out of rivalry for
enhanced performance. Key elements in the catch-up process are the use of knowledge by
emerging states, learned over the past several hundred years by developed states, to help set up
or mimic industrial processes. That saves time and increases output. The second crucial
component is the need for emerging nations in the catch-up growth stage to invest and save. The
third mechanism that is really vital is that emerging states have to sell what they produce on a
global scale. Institutions can complement, support and advance the technological race process by
enhancing the opportunities for technological entrepreneurship, by fostering education and
training, particularly of women in developing economies and by business deregulation in order
to improve efficiency.
18
5. ECONOMIC GROWTH FORECASTS WITH GLOBAL ECONOMETRIC MODELS
Simulations with econometric or mathematical models can depict the interdependencies
between the environment, and economic and social development [67]. An econometric model is
one of the tools economists use to forecast or predict future growths in the economy. Past
relationships are measured, for example, among such variables as consumer spending, household
income, tax rates, interest rates, and employment, and then forecasts are made on how changes in
some variables will affect the future course of others. The application of a global model
GINFORS by Meyers et al. [67] in 2004 forecasted a worldwide economic recovery till 2010
(Figure 1). Their calculations indicated that China and the South East Asian countries would be
the most dynamic economies, the United States would be in a middle position, followed by the
United Kingdom, and the EU area would have the weakest growth. We can argue that while the
general economic trend that we observe today for the EU and Asia was correctly predicted by the
GINSFORS model, the country specific problems with for example, Greece and Spain were not.
In a related study, Lukáš and Jan [68] reported on the application of an econometric panel
data model for regional competitiveness evaluation in 15 selected EU countries (Figure 2). The
three most competitive regions belonged to Groningen in Netherlands, Stockholm in Sweden and
Southern and Eastern Ireland. All these regions are highly developed according to the value of
their GDP per inhabitant which was higher than the EU average. The three least competitive
regions belonged to Dytiki Macedonia, Ipeiros in Greece and Flevoland in Netherlands. These
three regions were less developed according to the value of their GDP per inhabitant which was
lower than the EU average. It is important to note here that the model correctly predicted that
Greece is an economically weak region.
Economic output may vary between regions for a multitude of diverse causes (Figure 2).
Lukáš and Jan [68] noted that it important to be able to predict how such differences evolve over
time. In the standard neoclassical model the growth of productivity (i.e. output per worker)
depends on the growth of capital per worker and the rate of technical progress. Regional
differences in productivity growth were explained by regional differences in the rate of technical
progress and by regional differences in the growth of the capital labour ratio. Regional output
variances were predicted to narrow over time, as initially low productivity areas catch up with
originally high productivity ones.
19
Figure 1 Growth rates of real GDP for selected European countries [67]. Economic growth of three
EU countries was forecast with the Global Econometric Model GINFORS.
Figure 2. Pyramid model of regional competitiveness [68].
20
Waczriarg [69] in his review of Easterly’s “The Elusive Quest for Growth” [70] noted that
qualitative efforts to explain the bases of growth, and therefore to determine the policies that
could solve the problem of underdevelopment, have often been viewed with cynicism by those
economists who favor quantitative empirical work (i.e. econometric models). The latter are
closely associated with optimization models, recognizable institutional arrangements or
determinants, and large samples of data. He goes on to argue that William Easterly provides us
with simple mathematical correlations or regression models chosen from the cross-country
growth literature originating from the World Bank. One key feature of Easterly’s book that has
attracted the greatest attention was its disapproval of existing aid policies. Easterly explains the
sequence of adjustment loans directed by the World Bank and IMF at countries that waste these
resources on current consumption rather than on investment. This waste leads to stagnant
growth, debt crises, debt relief, and further adjustment loans.
Easterly [70] carefully reviews recent empirical studies on the determinants of economic
growth, focusing on correlations between economic performance and its determinants based on
the most-often cited papers in this literature. For example, the partial correlation between
indicators of corruption and growth is negative, in a wide variety of specifications. Waczriarg
[69] explains that this, clearly, does not imply that corruption negatively impacts growth. But the
sign of the partial correlation makes it more difficult to argue that corruption is in fact good for
growth, or, equivalently, that an increase in corruption would lead to an increase in growth.
Today economists use Solow's sources-of-growth econometric accounting models to
estimate the separate effects on economic growth of technological change, capital, and labor.
These neoclassical growth models, also known as the Solow–Swan growth models, attempt to
explain long run economic growth by looking at productivity, capital accumulation, population
growth, and technological progress [71-73]. Solow's model has been successfully fitted to
available data on US economic growth. In 1987, Solow received the Nobel Prize in Economics
for his work. Solow was also the first economist to develop a growth model which distinguished
between vintages or the age of capital. New capital is more valuable than old capital because,
since capital is produced based on known technology, and technology improves with time, new
capital will be more productive than old capital [74].
As Easterly reminds us, the only determinant of long-term per-capita income growth in the
Solow model is labor-augmenting technological progress. There is an ongoing debate on the 21
importance of human capital accumulation for growth since early studies found strong support
for the hypothesis that at least some measures of human-capital accumulation have statistically
significant predictive power [6]. The importance of human capital accumulation for growth is
debated in more detail in the next section. The preponderance of the evidence is that the
neoclassical determinants of growth do enter significantly in growth regressions. These are the
theories that stress incentives to innovate or accumulate capital as necessary conditions for
innovation and accumulation to occur. This was covered in some detail in the previous section
on Economic Growth, Industrial Racing and Catch-up.
Econometric models have shown that accumulation variables and population growth play
some part in accounting for the cross-country variation in growth [69-70]. Institutions,
geography, economic and political structures, policies and governance relate to the incentives to
innovate and accumulate, and go some way toward explaining the rest of the variation. This
arrangement of limited connections provides some indication of the sources of growth, but their
interpretation as causal effects is usually awkward. In particular, there is a need to clarify and
estimate the theoretical relationships that link structures and policies to accumulation and
innovation.
In summary, econometric models are useful as additional tools in forecasting economic
growth in regions such as EU. However, they are not fool proof tools and are at best, in our
opinion, good for predicting general trends. Such models must be used in conjunction with
qualitative information and the experience and knowledge of professional economists in
forecasting economic growth. As Easterly [70] notes, the quest for the perfect econometric
model that correctly describes economic growth remains elusive.
6. THE DEBATE OVER WHETHER OR NOT POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS CAUSE ECONOMIC GROWTH
Glaeser et al. [23] revisited the discussion over whether political institutions cause
economic growth, or whether, alternatively, growth and human capital accumulation lead to
institutional improvement. They found that most indicators of institutional quality used to
establish the proposition that institutions cause growth, as outlined for example in North’s and
Olson’s theories [24, 25] were constructed to be conceptually unsuitable for that purpose. Results
22
suggested that human capital is a more basic source of growth than are the institutions; poor
countries get out of poverty through good policies, often pursued by dictators, and subsequently
improve their political institutions. Furthermore, Spence [4] maintained that there is a need to
invest in people, knowledge, technology, and infrastructure; this encourages investment and
creates employment.
Economic research has identified two broad approaches to confronting the challenges in
establishing a self-governing state. The first approach, which is supported by North [24] and
Olson [25], emphasizes the need to start with democracy and other checks on government as the
mechanisms for securing property rights. With such political institutions in place, investment in
human and physical capital, and therefore economic growth, are expected to follow. The second
approach supported by Glaeser et al. [23] emphasizes the need for human and physical capital
accumulation to start the process. It holds that even pro-market dictators can secure property
rights as a matter of policy choice, not of political constraints. From the vantage point of poor
countries, it sees democracy as the consequence of increased education and wealth, not as their
cause.
The importance of constraining government has been stressed by many economists starting
with Montesquieu [75] and Smith [76]), and up to recent times by Hayek [7], as well by the new
institutional economists [75, 77]. Montesquieu [75], for example, spent nearly twenty years
researching and writing L'esprit des lois (The Spirit of the Laws), covering a wide range of topics
in politics, the law, sociology, and anthropology and providing several thousand citations. In this
political treatise Montesquieu supports constitutionalism and the separation of powers, the
abolition of slavery, the preservation of civil liberties and the rule of law, and the idea that
political and legal institutions should reflect the social and geographical character of each
particular region.
Friedrich August von Hayek was an Austrian-born economist and philosopher known for
his defense of classical liberalism and free-market capitalism against socialist and collectivist
thought. He is considered by some to be one of the most important economists and political
philosophers of the twentieth century [78]. Hayek was one of the leading academic critics of
collectivism in the 20th century. Hayek argued that all forms of collectivism (even those
theoretically based on voluntary cooperation) could only be maintained by a central authority of
some kind. In his popular book, The Road to Serfdom, written in 1944, and in subsequent works, 23
Hayek argued that socialism requires central economic planning and that such planning in turn
leads towards totalitarianism [7]. Recent work, including Hall and Jones [79], DeLong and
Shleifer [80], Acemoglu et al. [81, 82], Easterly and Levine [83], and Rodrik et al. [84], has
reached close to an intellectual consensus that the political institutions of limited government
cause economic growth. The reverse idea, namely that growth in income and human capital
causes institutional improvement, is most closely associated with the work of Lipset [63] who
believed that educated people are more likely to resolve their differences through negotiation and
voting than through violent disputes. Education is needed for courts to operate and to empower
citizens to engage with government institutions.
Countries differ in their stocks of human and social capital, which can be acquired through
policies pursued even by dictators. Institutional outcomes depend to a large extent on these
endowments [60]. This is supported by the experiences of South Korea, Taiwan, and China,
which grew rapidly under one-party dictatorships, the first two eventually turning to democracy.
Empirically, Lipset’s hypothesis that growth leads to better political institutions has received
considerable support in the work of Przeworski [64, 65] and his associates [42, 85]. The two
views of economic and political development share some important similarities. They both
emphasize the need for secure property rights to support investment in human and physical
capital, and they both see such security as a public policy choice. However, the institutional view
sees the pro-investment policies as a consequence of political constraints on government,
whereas the development view sees these policies in poor countries largely as choices of their
leaders.
Glaeser et al.’s [23] view was shaped by the experiences of North and South Korea. Prior
to the Korean War, the two countries were one state with similar histories (note that they were
occupied by Japan from 1910 to 1945). They were also both exceptionally poor in 1950.
Between the end of the Korean War and 1980, both countries were autocracies (i.e.
dictatorships). South Korean dictators chose capitalism and secure property rights, and the
country grew rapidly, reaching a per capita income level of US $1589 in 1980. The North
Korean dictators, in contrast, chose socialism, and the country only reached the level of income
of US $768 in 1980. South Korea obviously had better institutions as measured by constraints on
the executive, these institutions were the outcome of economic growth after 1950 rather than its
24
cause. Glaeser et al. [23] goes on to argue that it would be wrong to attribute South Korea’s
growth to these institutions rather than the choices made by its dictators.
Assessing the underlying connection between institutions and economic growth has proved
particularly complex. The research approaches as outlined by North [24], Olson [25], Hall and
Jones [79], DeLong and Shleifer [80], and Acemoglu et al., [81, 82] do not clearly show that
political institutions rather than human capital have a causal effect on economic growth.
Certainly, Glaeser et al. [23] goes on to argue that much evidence points to the dominance of
human capital for both growth and democratization. Their results were consistent with a
perspective on institutions outlined by Djankov et al. [60]; the greater the human and social
capital of a community, the more attractive are its institutional opportunities. Institutions are
highly persistent because history, including colonial history, shapes social choices. Furthermore
institutional outcomes also get better as a society grows richer, because institutional
opportunities improve. Importantly, in that framework, institutions have only a second order
effect on economic performance. The first order effect comes from human and social capital,
which shape both institutional and productive capacities of a society.
The results of the paper by Glaeser et al. [23] do not show that institutions do not matter.
That proposition is contradicted by a great deal of available empirical evidence that has been
provided by North [24], Olson [25], Hall and Jones [79], DeLong and Shleifer [80], and
Acemoglu et al., [81, 82]. Rather, Glaeser et al.’s [23] results suggest that the current
measurement strategies have conceptual flaws, and that researchers would do better focusing on
actual laws, rules, and compliance procedures that could be manipulated by a policy maker to
assess what works.
A key factor for poor countries is the policy choices made by autocrats. Democratization
and constraints on government do not need to come first. The economic success of East Asia in
the post war era and of China most recently, for example, has been a consequence of good
economic policy decisions by autocrats, not of institutions constraining them. The Chinese
example illustrates this point convincingly: Deng was one of the best dictators for economic
growth while Mao was one of the worst. While Mulligan et al. [86] present compelling evidence
that democracies are significantly more compassionate than dictatorships in such policy areas as
freedom of the press, torture, death penalty, and regulation of religion, Glaeser et al.’s [23]
evidence suggests that the Lipset [63], Przeworski [64, 65], and Barro [42] view of the world is 25
more accurate: countries that emerge from poverty accumulate human and physical capital under
dictatorships, and then, once they become richer, are increasingly likely to improve their
institutions.
7. CONCLUDING REMARKS Institutional aspects of economic growth have been critically reviewed with emphasis on
the fiscal crisis facing the European Union (EU). The EU monetary calamity poses a hazard to
the economic and financial stability of the world. It can be argued that numerous governance
institutions in the global economy are out of phase with the market conditions. In the present day
there can be accidents, crises, and mismanagement or incomplete management. The Japanese
economic governance institutions, for example, are struggling to handle the new reality after the
combined tsunami and nuclear reactor disasters. Similarly, we can see the EU trying to resolve
its fiscal problems which have resulted in part from poor economic governance. While there is
progress, there is also a lot of uncertainty. It remains to be seen whether or not the resolution of
this problem will be successful. The EU may need internal modifications in its governance
structure, including tightening up on entry requirements.
Concern over the sustainability of some EU countries’ public debt has continued to
increase over the past few years. While things will improve there is no quick fix. Greece and
Portugal had unsustainable fiscal policies well before the 2008-2009 financial crisis; for Spain
and Italy there is uncertainty about debt sustainability primarily due to worries about their future
economic development. The key to solving these issues is to build up budget surpluses.
However, this will take time. The projections of public debt ratios lead many experts to conclude
that the path pursued by fiscal authorities in a number of industrial states is unsustainable. Far-
reaching actions are required to limit the fast growth of current and future liabilities of
governments and reduce their unfavorable consequences for long-term growth and fiscal
stability. Furthermore, econometric models are useful as additional tools in forecasting economic
growth in regions such as EU. However, the quest for the perfect econometric model that
correctly describes economic growth remains elusive. Such models must be used in conjunction
with qualitative information and the experience and knowledge of professional economists in
forecasting economic growth.
26
A foremost mechanism to sustain economic expansion among nations lies in the industrial
catch-up processes among leaders and stragglers. This is born out of rivalry for enhanced
performance, and is similar to competitions between teams in sporting events. Important
elements in the catch-up process are the use of knowledge by emerging states, learned over the
past several hundred years by developed states, to help set up or mimic industrial processes. That
saves time and increases output. The second crucial component is the need for emerging nations
in the catch-up growth stage to invest and save. The third mechanism that is really vital is that
states have to sell what they produce on a global scale.
If we were to try and weigh institutional factors in as far as they tend to affect economic
growth. Positive factors on growth include consensual political systems that are flexible, a
competitive environment with fiscal incentives that allows for continuous improvement in
efficiency, industrial competition that allows for economic choices, and a well developed
educational system to help provide competent human capital for formal institutions such as
courts. Negative institutional factors affecting economic growth are corruption due to fiscal and
political decentralization resulting in stagnation due to reduced economic choices, autocrats or
dictators that make poor policy choices, and high public debt in relation to a state’s annual
economic output. In closing, the relationship between institutions and economic performance is
complicated. However, there is now convincing evidence that countries that have an open,
technologically competitive and creative environment tend to perform better economically.
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
The author confirms that this article has no conflict of interest.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Special thanks go out to Dr. Hans W. Gottinger the Executive Director of STRATEC in
Germany for his help in reviewing this article and for his useful comments and suggestions.
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